Random Qs answered
Physio questions
Physio, what does it mean?
Physio is short for physiotherapist (physical therapist is the term used in the U.S.A. and some other countries) or physiotherapy . For the meaning of each term click the link below:
physiotherapy
physiotherapist
What does a physio do?
There are however many forms of physiotherapy e.g. respiratory, neuro and paediatric etc. but at our clinics we generally only have musculoskeletal physiotherapists.
Physio, what to expect?
On your first visit, your injury/pain will be assessed through lots of questions, the physiotherapist asking you to perform various movement to identify where and when it hurts and some palpation (experienced physiotherapists can tell a lot about the nature of your condition using their hands and the feel of your tissue – blind physiotherapists, yes they do exist, tend to be particularly good at this).
You will then be treated using various techniques, also known as modalities.
You may be asked to undress in order to be examined and treated properly.
At the end of the session you will be given exercises. If they are difficult or complex you will be taught how to do them properly before the session is completed.
Physio, what clinic?
Physiotherapy questions
How did physiotherapy start?
Source: Wikipedia
Physicians like Hippocrates and later Galen are believed to have been the first practitioners of physical therapy, advocating massage, manual therapy techniques and hydrotherapy to treat people in 460 BC. After the development of orthopedics in the eighteenth century, machines like the Gymnasticon were developed to treat gout and similar diseases by systematic exercise of the joints, similar to later developments in physical therapy.
The earliest documented origins of actual physiotherapy as a professional group date back to Per Henrik Ling, “Father of Swedish Gymnastics,” who founded the Royal Central Institute of Gymnastics (RCIG) in 1813 for manipulation, and exercise. The Swedish word for physiotherapist is sjukgymnast = someone involved in gymnastics for those who are ill. In 1887, PTs were given official registration by Sweden’s National Board of Health and Welfare.
Other countries soon followed. In 1894, four nurses in Great Britain formed the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy. The School of Physiotherapy at the University of Otago in New Zealand in 1913, and the United States’ 1914 Reed College in Portland, Oregon, which graduated “reconstruction aides.” Since the profession’s inception, spinal manipulative therapy has been a component of the physical therapist practice.
Modern physiotherapy was established towards the end of the 19th century due to events that had an effect on a global scale, which called for rapid advances in physical therapy. Soon following American orthopedic surgeons began treating children with disabilities and began employing women trained in physical education, and remedial exercise. These treatments were applied and promoted further during the Polio outbreak of 1916. During the First World War women were recruited to work with and restore physical function to injured soldiers, and the field of physical therapy was institutionalized. In 1918 the term “Reconstruction Aide” was used to refer to individuals practicing physical therapy. The first school of physical therapy was established at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, D.C., following the outbreak of World War I. Research catalyzed the physical therapy (U.S. term) movement. The first physiotherapy research was published in the United States in March 1921 in “The PT Review.” In the same year, Mary McMillan organized the American Women’s Physical Therapeutic Association (now called the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA). In 1924, the Georgia Warm Springs Foundation promoted the field by touting physical therapy as a treatment for polio. Treatment through the 1940s primarily consisted of exercise, massage, and traction. Manipulative procedures to the spine and extremity joints began to be practiced, especially in the British Commonwealth countries, in the early 1950s.
Around this time when polio vaccines were developed, physiotherapists became a normal occurrence in hospitals throughout North America and Europe. In the late 1950s, physiotherapists started to move beyond hospital-based practice to outpatient orthopedic clinics, public schools, colleges/universities health-centres, geriatric settings (skilled nursing facilities), rehabilitation centers and medical centers. Specialization for physical therapy in the U.S. occurred in 1974, with the Orthopaedic Section of the APTA being formed for those physical therapists specializing in orthopaedics. In the same year, the International Federation of Orthopaedic Manipulative Physical Therapists was formed, which has ever since played an important role in advancing manual therapy worldwide.
Are physiotherapy expenses tax deductible?
Unfortunately, no.
There are a couple of reasons why the HMRC do not allowed as a tax deduction.
1. The expense is not “wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the business” – the test which HMRC apply when claiming expenses.
2. Duality – this treatment is of personal benefit as well as a business benefit to, for example, the self-employed builder with back pain. Since there is a personal benefit, it is not allowed as a tax deduction.
Similar rules apply toi rivate health insurance.
If your business (or employer) chooses to pay for these health related services it is classed as a benefit and you will be taxed as receiving a benefit in kind, which will then appear on your P11D.
Are physiotherapy doctors?
No, they are not the same. The training for the professions is different.
However, all physiotherapists can give medicines advice to their patients. This is an expectation of reasonable physiotherapy practice for many conditions. They can also supply and administer medicines to patients under either a Patient Specific Direction, or a Patient Group Direction.Physiotherapists who have additional prescribing annotations to their HCPC registration may prescribe all licensed medicines – including seven controlled drugs – which are within the scope of physiotherapy prescribing practice.
Injection therapy is the administration of medicines, and other selected products, to intra- and extra-articular tissues and joint spaces by invasive injection. Injection therapy also includes aspiration of joint spaces.
There are two types of prescribing for physiotherapists:
- Supplementary prescribing is the use of a written clinical management plan (CMP) to prescribe agreed medicines in partnership with a doctor. The CMP can include any licensed or unlicensed medicines and all controlled drugs.
- Independent prescribing is the use of your own clinical reasoning and professional judgment to determine the nature and extent of any medicines to be used in the management of diagnosed and undiagnosed conditions. Independent prescribers may prescribe any licensed medicine from the British National Formulary, within national and local guidelines, for any condition within their area of competence within the overarching framework of human movement, performance and function. Independent prescribers may also mix medicines prior to administration and prescribe from a restricted list of seven controlled drugs.
For more information on physiotherapy prescribers visit the website for The Chartered Society of Physiotherapy: www.csp.org.uk
Are physiotherapy services VATable?
No. According to HMRC, if you are a health professional in the uk your services are exempt from VAT when both of the following conditions are met:
1. The services are within the profession in which you are registered to practise.
2. The primary purpose of the services is the protection, maintenance or restoration of the health of the person concerned.
For the purposes of VAT, medical services (including medical care and treatment) are restricted only to services which fulfil the second condition above. This includes the diagnosis of illnesses, the provision of analyses of scans or samples and helping a health professional, hospital or similar institution to make a diagnosis.
Physiotherapists are are registered under the Health Professions Order 2001.
Are physical therapy and physiotherapy the same?
Essentially, Yes.
It seems to simply be a difference in nomenclature as opposed to techniques, ethos and purpose.
That said, there can be a lot of differences between how physiotherapists approach musculoskeletal problems. A lot of that has to do with training. In the UK, private physiotherapy clinics may have a more hands on approach compared with certain NHS physiotherapy departments but this too can vary a lot.
Before you attend a physiotherapy clinic, it may be worth asking what kind of approach the physiotherapists have; is it a hands-on or mainly exercise based, for example?
What happens when physiotherapy doesn't work?
If after a number of physiotherapy sessions it becomes clear that the problem you have is still not resolving (this is rare), there are a number of things that may occur.
The physiotherapist may refer you to your GP or to a consultant depending on how you initially came to the clinic.
If further exploration of your condition is needed, we may refer you to your GP or a consultant (via letter) and enquire as to whether they think an X-ray or MRI may be useful. The GP or consultant may agree that this is a good route to explore and organise this for you.
(*important note X-rays and MRIs are not always conclusive and do not necessarily shed any light on the condition – movies and TV series can dramatise these procedures, making them out to be the be-all and end-all in diagnostics. They are often pretty useful though.)
The physiotherapist may refer you directly to a consultant or a surgeon, especially if you have private health insurance.
On the whole, we believe it is best to go down the route of conservative treatment first, such as physiotherapy, and if that doesn’t work, then consider other options.
Can you have physiotherapy when you are pregnant?
Yes!
Your body undergoes a lot of changes during pregnancy and is under ‘abnormal’ pressures which can cause discomfort and pain, especially in your lower back due to natural postural adjustments or pelvic girdle pain. After a thorough assessment, there is a lot that physiotherapists can do in order to alleviate your pain and help you to maintain healthy pain-free function. For example, soft tissue release for muscles that are overworking and joint mobilisation can bring swift relief. Certain exercises can also help prevent further discomfort and pain.
If you have any concerns about your particular situation, please do not hesitate to contact us.
Physiotherapy questions
How can physiotherapy help Arthritis?
There are a numer of ways a visit to a physio can be useful if you suffer from arthritis, here are a few:
Education:
Type arthritis into an internet search engine and you will get literally thousands of pages of information. However, a lot of it will not be relevant to you or to your particular scenario.
If you suffer from arthritis, you want to know how you can optimise (we use that word a lot) your lifestyle without aggravating your condition or making it worse. Most of the literature is pretty generic and we all present differently due to our unique biomechanics, genetics, lifestyle etc.
An expert physio will be able to assess your particular problem, let’s say it is a hip problem. They will be able to tell, from your current mobility, strength, flexibility, age etc what treatment and exercises would be appropriate for you to maintain and even improve your fitness and functionality without causing further pain or harm.
Physiotherapists have a unique set of very specific skills which are directed towards your biomechanical functionality and complement the work of other expert medical professionals. GPs have a huge knowledge base, which covers a wide variety of medical matters, consultants conversely, have a much narrower field of expertise that goes very deep and sometimes involves surgical expertise.
You would not want to see a physio about a viral infection, a GP for major surgery (unless it is for a referral) or a consultant about a common cold. Each has its place in the triage system.
If you have arthritis and want to work out what kind of activity you should and should not be doing, based on your circumstances, then a physiotherapist will help educate you as to what will be best for you (after a thorough assessment).
Managing arthritic pain and discomfort:
Outside of medications, which other medical professionals may advise on, there are other things physiotherapists can advise on which may help manage arthritic pain.
A very simple method is through managing the temperature of the area of discomfort. Sometimes an ice pack may help cool and soothe hot, swollen joint (a bag of frozen peas wrapped in a tea towel NOT directly placed on the skin can be used. N.B tinned peas won’t work, there is no magic in the peas, it’s the temperature and flexibility of a pack of frozen peas which makes them useful ;0)
Alternatively, heat may help to relax and soothe tired and aching and sore muscles. Hot water bottles are great for this – not too hot and NOT placed directly on the skin.
Splinting is another useful strategy for swollen or painful joints. If you have rheumatoid arthritis and have flare-up, your physio may be able to advise what kind of temporary splint would be useful and where to source one from. Our physiotherapists in Huntingdon can direct you to some excellent suppliers or source the ideal product for you.
A TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation) device is a small electronic unit which transmits low-level electrical pulses to your nerve endings via pads placed on your skin. It is a form of electrotherapy and works by interfering with pain messages that are sent to the brain, subsequently altering your perception of the pain. You will probably sense a tingling which you will most likely find soothing.
Acupuncture has been shown to to relieve arthritic pain. Though there is some debate around it, it is believed the relief occurs by influencing (diverting or changing) pain signals which are sent to the brain from the affected tissues. Acupuncture can stimulate your body’s own pain-relieving hormones (endorphins and encephalins), bringing about pain relief, which may initially only last a short time when you begin treatment. Repeated treatment (usually weekly for six or eight sessions) has been shown to give long-term benefit, up to several months. .
Strengthening, Stretching and Mobilising
Arthritis causes joint stiffness and often muscle weakness. Our physiotherapists will be able to assess your muscle strength and the range of movement in your joints. From there, they will be able to advise on particular stretches and exercises you can perform at home in order to keep your joints working optimally. During the treatment session, they will also be able to use their hands-on skills in order to release and lengthen shortened and ‘knotted’ muscles and help your soft tissue to be in great condition through various forms of manual therapy.
Access to a swimming pool or hydrotherapy pool where you can perform exercises in warm water may also help. Many with lower limb problems may find it easier to move in water due to the water supporting your weight and taking strain off the joints enabling you to move your joints and muscles without straining them.
Exercise is another way to manage your pain if it is done intelligently and in a graded manner.
Grading involves starting slowly and increasing in progressive, small steps. As you build the exercise up, you will strengthen muscles around your joints (which may take some pressure off them) and increase your fitness. Your general fitness can have a huge effect on your overall wellbeing. The increase in stamina through the exercise programme will help improve your overall quality of life. All of this can be done without an increase in pain, if it’s done gently with consideration. Consistent exercise also stimulates production of endorphins, the body’s natural pain-relieving hormones.
Don’t over-do it! Though exercise is great, it must be done with wisdom and discernment. Overdoing it will make your pain worse, however, not doing enough will too. Our physiotherapists at our Cambridge and Huntingdon wellbeing clinics can advise you on how to best increase your activity at a rate best for you. You can enjoy being busy but it needs to be balanced with rest. This exploration of where the balance lies, takes time, patience and a discipline of awareness.
Mindfulness Meditation is a very simple practice which a person how to relate to their pain and discomfort differently. Studies have shown arthritis sufferers who have attended an eight week mindfulness course report a better quality of life through an ability to be aware of their pain and an increased emotional resilience – they become less reactive, less affected by the pain and thus report to feeling better.
We offer mindfulness training at both the Cambridge and Huntingdon Physiotherapy Clinics.
For more information please click here
Fitness and Functionality. Being active is very vital when you have arthritis. You may be afraid that exercise is going to make your pain worse or cause more damage to already sore joints. However, your joints have evolved to be dynamic and not static. The muscles, tendon, ligaments and fascia around your joints become weaker or stiffer or shortened if they’re are too static. This may ultimately reduce your mobility and independence, through causing your joints to become unstable. Exercise will not only increase your general fitness but will also help you to maintain a healthy body weight, improve your general mobility and make you feel more self-confident – endorphins are released when we push our bodies.
What is important, is that is that you find a form of exercise which you enjoy, that way, you’ll be motivated to do it regularly. Discuss this with one of our physiotherapists and they will help you to put together a programme which is ideal for you.
Physiotherapy questions
What do physiotherapists study?
In the UK a physiotherapist qualifies by gaining a Bachelor of Science degree in Physiotherapy. The degree usually takes three years and involves learning the theory and clinical practice, which is developed while on placement in hospitals throughout the UK. So a physiotherapy student will already have some experience of what the job involves prior to graduation. During the course the students learn all about human anatomy, physiology, biomechanics, biochemistry etc. as well as the latest research in treatment techniques for a wide variety of conditions.
Are physiotherapists doctors?
Physiotherapy equipment questions
What tools and equipment do physiotherapists use?
The standard piece of equipment is the the plinth, or physio bed, as it is commonly known. The physio plinth is adjustable for height and we use three-section beds which allow a greater range of flexibility for the physio to apply treatment. The beds are comfortable enough to lie on for a treatment session but firm enough to offer resistance. This may be needed when the physio is using pressure for example, for soft tissue release.
This is one of the reasons why a visit to the clinic is preferable over home visits; rarely are beds or couches the right combination of being firm enough and comfortable for high quality treatment.
Our team of expert physiotherapists try to help you to get to optimal function i.e. your biomechanics working as efficiently as possible, and not simply pain free. To this end, our physiotherapists will use exercise equipment to enable strengthening and flexibility. Our site in Cambridge at the Cambridge Rugby Club has a great gym where we work alongside Ben Fitches. Ben is the strength and conditioning coach for the Club’s first team and an excellent trainer – he allows us to use some of his superb equipment.
If you want to get fit and strong and live around Cambridge, we cannot recommend him highly enough.
Our site in Huntingdon has a studio which we use for more expansive movements which are not be possible in a treatment room.
What is ultrasound? What is ultrasound used for?
With regard to physiotherapy, an ‘ultrasound machine’ produces waves by means of mechanical vibration in the metal treatment head. The head is moved over the skin surface in the region of the injury, which transmits the energy into the tissues. This is thought to reduce the healing time of certain soft tissue injuries, possibly through the increased production of collagen (a protein component in soft tissue such as tendons and ligaments) and/or beneficially influencing the body’s inflammatory response to promote healing.
Physiotherapy treatment questions
What are physiotherapy treatments?
See our information page by clicking here
What are physiotherapy modalities?
Modalities should be considered as an adjunct to an active treatment programme in the management of injuries and pain . They should never be used as the sole method of treatment.
So, during treatment with one of our experienced physiotherapists, you may receive treatment in the form of soft tissue release, trigger point therapy, acupuncture and fascial release. You will then, most likely, be given exercises and stretches which form a home based strengthening programme.
There are many kinds of treatment modalities.
How much are physiotherapy sessions? How much do they cost?
For more information on the cost of physiotherapy sessions, please click visit our FAQs page and scrolling down to HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?:
It is our aim to deliver the highest standards and the best value. Our prices are always competitive but we will never be the cheapest physiotherapy service around. We think you will feel the difference and, after receiving excellent treatment, consider your trust in us well placed.
How long are physiotherapy sessions?
Generally, for single body part injuries/pain, initial assessments last 45 minutes and follow-up sessions last 30 minutes. We give a little extra time for the first appointment to allow for a thorough examination and treatment.
We do offer 30 minute initial assessments but these sessions do not involve any treatment. You will receive an assessment of your condition and a diagnosis but that is all.
We also offer longer follow-up sessions if a person has multiple injury/pain sites e.g. shoulder and knee pain. This is a more cost effective way of treating both injuries/pain sites at the same time. *Independent assessments are usually required for each body part.
How does physiotherapy help?
There are many specialisms under the umbrella of physiotherapy, such as neuro-physiotherapy, respiratory-physiotherapy, paediatric-physiotherapy.
Our clinics in Cambridgeshire (Cambridge and Huntingdon) have a team of musculoskeletal physiotherapists. As the name suggests, they are experts in the skeletal structure of the body and the musculature of the body and the interplay of both of these elements. This incorporates biomechanics, the involvement of the nervous system and how it affects movement and pain, other soft tissue such as ligaments, tendons. We also train our physiotherapists in the understanding of fascia, the connective tissue which, with the skeletal structure, supports the structure and movement of the body and is interwoven throughout all the structures of the body.
Our physiotherapists use their knowledge of the body in order to help you to have pain free, full function through various treatment types and through optimisation of your movement patterns. This enables you to get on with your life with the fitness (and by fit we mean your ability to perform your tasks efficiently) you require and not have to be distracted by your body/pain.
Physiotherapy training questions
Are physiotherapy degrees funded by the NHS?
They use to be but that has all recently changed…
Financial support is available for approved courses in a number of health professions changed as of 1st August 2017. Students applying for a number of health courses now need to apply for a student loan whereas they used to receive an NHS bursary. Support under the new system includes: 25% more up-front financial living cost support while studying compared to a NHS bursary e.g. a single student studying a three year course receives approximately £2,000 more funding support per year on a student loan, a non-repayable grant of £1,000 per year for students with child dependants, access to an exceptional support fund of up to £3,000 per year for those students facing severe hardship support for excess travel and dual accommodation expenses incurred owing to attending practice placements for 2017 only,
Exceptions: students will continue to receive the bursary, including those studying part-time, postgraduate students and those applying for dental hygiene and therapy courses.
What do physiotherapists study?
Are physiotherapy assistants regulated?
The CSP’s Code of Members’ Professional Values and Behaviour sets out the CSP’s expectations of all members: qualified physiotherapists, associates and students.
For more information visit the website for The Chartered Society of
Physiotherapy: www.csp.org.uk
How physiotherapy works for back pain?
A skilled physiotherapist will first conduct a thorough examination of the person they are treating.
This begins by asking the patient about the details of the pain. This is known as the subjective part of the assessment:
Questions such as: When did you first notice the pain? Was there a specific start to the pain and, if so, what were you doing when the pain first came on? If not, did the pain come on suddenly or gradually? Is the pain constant or sporadic? Do certain movements make the pain worse or better? Is the pain better, worse or the same day and night or does it worsen at certain points of the day? the list goes on…
From the subjective assessment the physio will then have a better idea of what to examine in the next part of the assessment.
The physiotherapist then conducts what is called the objective part of the assessment by examining the person more closely. This may involve asking the person to perform certain movements which may be linked to the area causing pain. Physiotherapy involves being able to closely examine the movement patterns of the body to see which muscle bundles and fibres are firing at certain points during a movement – an example of this would be asking a person to slowly raise their arm above their head. In that seemingly simple process, various different muscles should fire (begin to work) at different stages of the movement. The skilled physio will be able to recognise if certain muscles are firing too early or not firing enough. They will be able to tell if the person is automatically recruiting muscles that should not be firing in order to compensate for weaknesses elsewhere.
Then the physio will perform the hands-on part of the objective element of the assessment. I am not a physio but having run the Cambridgeshire clinics for 14 years and having been in on many training sessions (sometimes as the ‘patient’), I’m always impressed by how much an experienced physiotherapist can tell about the state and quality of the person’s muscles, tendons, joints, ligaments etc just from their sense of touch. Sometimes the physio places their hands on the tissue, closes their eyes and examines the feel and texture of the site. This part of the objective may also involve asking the person to move while the physio resists the movement or feels the movement of the body during the move.
All this allows the physiotherapist to identify which structures are involved and which are not. More often than not there are a number of structures involved and so the treatment will be multifaceted.
If back pain is the problem, the above process informs the physiotherapist which parts of the back need attention. They will then choose which treatment techniques will be appropriate and after discussing this with the person and gaining the person’s consent, the treatment will begin.
The expert physio will also be able to inform the person how many treatment sessions they will need in order to get back to full function.
The above process applies to most injuries/pain assessments.
Osteoporosis Questions:
What is Osteoporosis?
However, some women experience an increased rate of bone loss for a few years after the menopause.
The three main influencing factors involved are
1. gender
2. age
3. genetics..
Other influencing factors include smoking, drinking more than three units of alcohol a day and inactivity.
How Can physiotherapy help osteoporosis?
Our bones, like an awful lot of our physical structures, can be significantly influenced by the pressures we choose to exert on them. Bones are living, dynamic tissues and just like muscles are strengthened by exercise, bone too responds to be able to cope with the demands expected of it.
Physiotherapists are experts in the field of biomechanics and exercise. They are able to skillfully judge which kinds of exercise will be ideal for you and which exercises may not be helpful.
Through consistent and intelligent exercise, you can affect the level of bone density and thus limit the risk of broken bones.
This is particularly important for the elderly who are at greater risk of falls.
See info on Fall Prevention
How does Physiotherapy help the elderly?
How can physiotherapy help maintain independence for the elderly?
A very current topic of discussion is the issue of maintaining independence and functionality when we are older. As we age, unless we have a strategy in place, we lose muscle bulk, flexibility and balance. Physiotherapists can assist you to maintain your independence for longer by giving you exercises, stretches and the treatment you need in order to allow you to move into your 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s feeling strong, balanced and capable of approaching all its challenges of life with confidence and composure.
There are lots of little nuggets of information which physiotherapists can impart that can make a huge difference to your quality of life
Fall prevention:
For example, did you know, one of the reasons why the elderly are more likely to fall is that as we age we tend to become less able to rotate out torso fully?
Though an elderly person may be able to balance while remaining still, e.g. stand on one leg, if they are not able to rotate their torso, when they become unbalanced while walking, they are less able to regain balance. While counteracting a trip e.g. tripping over the edge of a rug, a flexible person would stride out and twist their torso in to remain on their feet.
This all happens very quickly on an unconscious level. When the torso is inflexible, the person may step out but the lack of twist leaves them unbalanced and likely to stumble further, increasing the likelihood of a fall.
A skilled physiotherapist, like the ones at our clinic in Huntingdon, will be able to assist a person to maintain and improve their ability to rotate and increase their balance through proprioceptive exercises.
The above example is just one example of how physiotherapy can assist independence for the elderly. For more information on other things we can do, please call us on our contacts page.
Which is better questions?
We sometimes get asked questions about how relevant or how effective physiotherapy is compared to other forms of treatment. So, here is our best attempt to answer some of those questions…
Which is better, physiotherapy or chiropractor?
There is a lot of overlap these days when it comes to how a lot of physiotherapists (especially in private practice) and how chiropractors treat their client’s conditions. Traditionally, chiropractors are specialists trained in the treatment of problems around spinal alignment, manipulations, the treatment of soft tissue and joints, whereas physiotherapists would be more focused on the movement and the clients ability to be functionally fit and pain free, again experts in the treatment of soft tissue, joints and the global functioning of the human system.
However, over the years, we have met many chiropractors and other practitioners from other disciplines (see below) training on the same courses. We have met physiotherapists whose approach is more closely aligned to ours and physiotherapists whose approach is quite different. A lot depends on the training, education and conceptual framework of the individual practitioner.
If you are unsure about who to choose to treat your condition, ask friends for personal referrals. We believe word of mouth is always the best form of advertising and a good source of reliable information when it comes to treating pain and musculoskeletal problems.
If, after being treated, you are uncertain whether you have found the right practitioner, get a second opinion.
Which is better, physiotherapy or osteopathy?
The answer to the above question is basically the same for this one. Osteopathy is the discipline of treating structural and mechanical dysfunctions of the body and restoring the whole of the body to health. As you can see, there isn’t a huge difference between this and physiotherapy. Again, there can be a lot of variation between one therapist and the next so it is worth asking around to find someone you feel confident to treat your injury/pain.
Which is better, physiotherapy or pharmacy?
This popular question is more concerned with career choice. We are not experts in career choice or pharmacy but we do know that being a physiotherapist is a very rewarding role.
In his book, “The Happiness Equation”, Nick Powdthavee a social economist (someone who uses the statistical tools that an economist might use to tease out what small changes can make a big difference to the overall economy and applies them to what makes us happy) lists physiotherapist at the top of the table when it comes to happiness and career.
Why might this be? Well, firstly, you spend most of the day connecting with others on a one-to-one basis, listening to them, building rapport with them in order to establish a therapeutic alliance and then treating them. Secondly, you then use your skill and time to help them to have less pain and discomfort. This often happens within the 30 minute appointment slot, giving the client instant improvement and you, the physio, instant reward for your hard work. The comes the gratitude of the client and the reward of feeling you have made a difference to someone’s quality of life. WHAT A GREAT JOB!
Which is better, physiotherapy or dentistry?
Please see the answer above. We are not experts in dentistry but choosing physiotherapy as a career is a very good choice.
Start your journey back to full health today...
Contact us at the Abbots Ripton Clinic, Huntingdon
Tel: 01487 773 088 Email: info@physio.uk.net